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Photo, Print, Drawing Warnick & Leibrandt's Philadelphia Stove Works and Hollow-Ware Foundry. First Wharf above Noble Street, Philadelphia. Warnick & Leibrandt's Philadelphia stove works and hollow-ware foundry. First wharf above Noble St. Philadelphia

About this Item

Title

  • Warnick & Leibrandt's Philadelphia Stove Works and Hollow-Ware Foundry. First Wharf above Noble Street, Philadelphia.

Other Title

  • Warnick & Leibrandt's Philadelphia stove works and hollow-ware foundry. First wharf above Noble St. Philadelphia

Summary

  • William H. Rease, born in Pennsylvania circa 1818, was the most prolific lithographer of advertising prints in Philadelphia during the 1840s and 1850s. This advertisement shows two views of the stove works and hollow-ware foundries owned and operated by Charles W. Warnick and Frederick Leibrandt. The upper scene depicts the stove works at Gunners Run (later the Aramingo Canal) and Franklin Avenue (later Girard Avenue). Viewed from the opposite bank of Gunner's Run, the scene shows laborers with horse-drawn carts and drays on the bank of the canal, in front of a complex of industrial buildings. In the foreground, laborers lift a large plank of wood, and men in groups of three move materials across the canal in rowboats. A sailing ship is docked at left and smaller vessels are on the canal. The bottom winter scene depicts the stove works looking northeast at the Noble Street Wharf (at the northeast corner of Beach and Noble Streets), showing horse-drawn traffic in the snow-covered street outside the company's large brick building. Also seen are horse-drawn sleds, a speeding horse-drawn sleigh carrying a family of four, Warnick & Leibrandt covered wagons (center), and children playing with a dog and sleds on North Beach Street in the foreground. Bare masts are visible on the Delaware River behind the company's building. The Noble Street Wharf site later became home to the Philadelphia Sugar House. Rease became active in his trade around 1844, and through the 1850s he mainly worked with printers Frederick Kuhl and Wagner & McGuigan in the production of advertising prints known for their portrayals of human details. Although Rease often collaborated with other lithographers, by 1850 he promoted in O'Brien's Business Directory his own establishment at 17 South Fifth Street, above Chestnut Street. In 1855 he relocated his establishment to the northeast corner of Fourth and Chestnut Streets (after a circa 1853-55 partnership with Francis Schell), where in addition to advertising prints he produced certificates, views, maps, and maritime prints.

Names

  • Rease, William H., circa 1818-1893 Artist.

Created / Published

  • Philadelphia : Wagner & McGuigan?, 1850.

Headings

  • -  United States of America--Pennsylvania--Philadelphia
  • -  1850
  • -  Advertising
  • -  Cities and towns
  • -  Foundries
  • -  Horse-drawn vehicles
  • -  Iron foundries
  • -  Iron industry
  • -  Lithographs
  • -  Piers and wharves
  • -  Rowboats
  • -  Sailing ships
  • -  Ships
  • -  Smokestacks
  • -  Stove industry
  • -  Street scenes
  • -  Wagons

Notes

  • -  Title devised, in English, by Library staff.
  • -  "Digital catalog number: POS 818"--Note extracted from World Digital Library.
  • -  Original resource extent: 1 print : lithograph, tinted with one stone ; 73 x 59 centimeters.
  • -  Reference extracted from World Digital Library: Rease, William H., Philadelphia on Stone Biographical Dictionary, Library Company of Philadelphia, http://www.lcpdigital.org. External
  • -  Original resource at: The Library Company of Philadelphia.
  • -  Content in English.
  • -  Description based on data extracted from World Digital Library, which may be extracted from partner institutions.

Medium

  • 1 online resource.

Source Collection

  • Philadelphia on Stone

Digital Id

Library of Congress Control Number

  • 2021670312

Online Format

  • compressed data
  • image

Additional Metadata Formats

IIIF Presentation Manifest

Rights & Access

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Credit Line: [Original Source citation], World Digital Library

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Cite This Item

Citations are generated automatically from bibliographic data as a convenience, and may not be complete or accurate.

Chicago citation style:

Rease, William H., Circa Artist. Warnick & Leibrandt's Philadelphia Stove Works and Hollow-Ware Foundry. First Wharf above Noble Street, Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Philadelphia United States of America, 1850. Philadelphia: Wagner & McGuigan?. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/2021670312/.

APA citation style:

Rease, W. H. (1850) Warnick & Leibrandt's Philadelphia Stove Works and Hollow-Ware Foundry. First Wharf above Noble Street, Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Philadelphia United States of America, 1850. Philadelphia: Wagner & McGuigan?. [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2021670312/.

MLA citation style:

Rease, William H., Circa Artist. Warnick & Leibrandt's Philadelphia Stove Works and Hollow-Ware Foundry. First Wharf above Noble Street, Philadelphia. Philadelphia: Wagner & McGuigan?. Photograph. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <www.loc.gov/item/2021670312/>.